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The Justice Trilogy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Justice Trilogy, also called the Justice Cycle, was a series of young-adult science-fiction books written by Virginia Hamilton.[1] Considered philosophically significant by critics within the field of young adult literature,[2] the series is also notable as one of the first young-adult science fiction novels by a significant African American author.[3]

The series consists of three books:[4][5]

  • Justice and Her Brothers (1978). A young African-American girl finds her idyllic rural summer disturbed by the discovery that both she and her somewhat sinister twin brothers have powerful psychic powers.[6]
  • Dustland (1980). The siblings from the first volume, together with a friend, time travel into a strange post-apocalyptic future.[7]
  • The Gathering (1981). Justice and her brothers must overcome their sibling rivalries in order to defeat a malevolent entity from the future.[8]

References

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  1. ^ The Chronicles of Harriet, retrieved 2017-06-21
  2. ^ Smith, Karen Patricia (1994-01-28). African-American voices in young adult literature: Tradition, transition, transformation. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810842724.
  3. ^ Hampton, Gregory Jerome; Brooks, Wanda M (2003). "Octavia Butler and Virginia Hamilton: Black Women Writers and Science Fiction". The English Journal. 92 (6): 70–74. doi:10.58680/ej20031085. JSTOR 3650538.
  4. ^ Open Road Media, retrieved 2017-06-21
  5. ^ Mitchell and Taylor, ed. Cambridge Companion to African American Women's Literature, page 221.
  6. ^ Kutenplon and Olmstead, Adult Fiction by African American Writers, page 92.
  7. ^ Virginia Hamilton Books: Dustland, retrieved 2017-06-21
  8. ^ Virginia Hamilton Books: The Gathering, retrieved 2017-06-21